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Sauk/Sac Indian
Genealogy
Sauk ( Osā'kiwŭg,
'people of the outlet,' or, possibly, 'people of the yellow earth,' in
contradistinction from the Muskwakiwuk, 'Red Earth People', a name of the
Foxes).
One of a number of Algonquian tribes whose earliest known habitat was
embraced within the eastern peninsula of Michigan, the other tribes being the
Potawatomi, the "Nation of the Fork," and probably the famous Mascoutens and
the Foxes. The present name of Saginaw Bay (Sāginā'we’,
signifying 'the country or place of the Sauk') is apparently derived from the
ethnic appellative Sauk. There is presumptive evidence that the Sauk, with the
tribes mentioned above, were first known to Europeans under the general ethnic
term "Gens de Feu" or that of "Asistagueronon," the latter being the Huron
translation of the specific name Potawatomi, both the terms in question being
first recorded by Champlain and Sagard. In 1616 Champlain, while in what is
now Ontario, learned from the Tionontati, or Tobacco Nation, that their
kindred, the Neutral Nation, aided the Ottawa (Cheueux releuez) in waging war
against the Gens de Fen, i. e. 'People of the Fire,' and that the Ottawa
carried on a warfare against "another nation of savages who were called
Asistagueronon, which is to say, 'People of the Place of the Fire,"' who were
distant from the Ottawa 10 days' journey; and lastly, in more fully describing
the country, manners, and customs of the Ottawa, he added, "In the first
place, they wage war against another nation of savages who are called
Asistagueronon, which is to say, 'people of the fire,' distant from them 10
days' journey." He supplemented this statement with the remark that "they
pressed me strongly to assist them against their enemies, who are on the shore
of the Mer Douce [Lake Huron], distant 200 leagues." Sagard, who was in Canada
during the years 1623-26, wrote in his Histoire du Canada (I, 194, ed. 1866),
that the sedentary and the migratory Ottawa together waged war against the
Asistagueronon, who were 9 or 10 days' journey by canoe from the Ottawa, a
distance which he estimated at "about 200 leagues and more of travel."
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Sac and Fox Indian Treaties (Sack, Sauk, Sock) |
Treaty With The Wyandot Etc., January 9, 1789
Treaty With The Sauk and Foxes, November 3, 1804
Treaty with the Sauk, September 13, 1815
Treaty with the Sauk, May 13, 1816
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes, Etc., July 15, 1830
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes, September 21, 1832
Treaty With The Sauk And Fox Tribe, September 27, 1836
Treaty with the Sauk and Foxes, September 28, 1836
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes, September 28, 1836
Treaty With The Iowa, Etc., September 17, 1836
Treaty with the Sauk and Foxes, October 21, 1837
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes, October 21, 1837
Schedule of Debts
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes Of Missouri, May 18, 1854
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes, October 1, 1859
Treaty with the Sauk and Foxes, Etc., March 6, 1861
Treaty With The Sauk And Foxes, February 18, 1867 |
Native American Nations
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